“…Yet, historically YCCC, thanks to it's administrators, was one of the most conservative of cricket clubs -with big and small 'c's -initially being in the shadow of Nottinghamshire, the early 'northern stronghold', 23 and tended to be a follower of trends, rather than a club that set them. Richard Holt has noted that 'Yorkshire cricket was based upon a particularly fierce sense of territory', 24 which, Lord Hawke and the subsequent 'deportation' 25 of Cecil Parkin apart, forbade a player born outside of Yorkshire officially representing the white rose county until 1992. 26 This selection policy, which initially applied to all counties but only persisted at YCCC, has helped to enhance, since its ECC debut against Surrey in 1863, YCCC's reputation as a bastion of serious, competitive cricket, populated with equally serious, 'regionally motivated' professionals.…”